plants - it photosynthesises.
Animals don't have chlorophyll's
No animals do, and only green plants do.
No. Chlorophyll is unique to green plants.
chlorophyll.
Only photosynthesising plants need to produce chlorophyll, because they feed autotrophically i.e. they make their own food, and chlorophyll is used to make plants' food. Animals don't make their own food so have no need for chlorophyll.
Animals do not have chlorophyll.
Plants have chlorophyll that absorbs light in energy. We don't have that chlorophyll. Also plants Producers. Animals are consumers.
No, it's an exclusive attribute of plants. Plants contain chlorophyll (it's what makes them green), which through the process of photosynthesis produces glucose. Animals get glucose from plants.
Chlorophyll is found only in plants because it is a pigment essential for the process of photosynthesis, which is unique to plants. Photosynthesis is the process where plants convert light energy into chemical energy, using chlorophyll to capture sunlight. Animals do not carry out photosynthesis, so they do not require chlorophyll.
Plants have chlorophyll and cell wall while animals are heterotrophs and motile .
chlorophyll
That's sort of a definition question. We call those things with chlorophyll plants, and those without animals.